H03L7/14

Apparatus for digitally controlled oscillators and associated methods
11545985 · 2023-01-03 · ·

An apparatus includes a digitally controlled oscillator (DCO), which includes an inductor coupled in series with a first capacitor. The DCO further includes a second capacitor coupled in parallel with the series-coupled inductor and first capacitor, a first inverter coupled in parallel with the second capacitor, and a second inverter coupled back-to-back to the first inverter. The DCO further includes a digital-to-analog-converter (DAC) to vary a capacitance of the first capacitor.

Apparatus for Digitally Controlled Oscillators and Associated Methods
20220337254 · 2022-10-20 ·

An apparatus includes a digitally controlled oscillator (DCO), which includes an inductor coupled in series with a first capacitor. The DCO further includes a second capacitor coupled in parallel with the series-coupled inductor and first capacitor, a first inverter coupled in parallel with the second capacitor, and a second inverter coupled back-to-back to the first inverter. The DCO further includes a digital-to-analog-converter (DAC) to vary a capacitance of the first capacitor.

Wireless communication technology, apparatuses, and methods

Millimeter wave (mmWave) technology, apparatuses, and methods that relate to transceivers, receivers, and antenna structures for wireless communications are described. The various aspects include co-located millimeter wave (mmWave) and near-field communication (NFC) antennas, scalable phased array radio transceiver architecture (SPARTA), phased array distributed communication system with MIMO support and phase noise synchronization over a single coax cable, communicating RF signals over cable (RFoC) in a distributed phased array communication system, clock noise leakage reduction, IF-to-RF companion chip for backwards and forwards compatibility and modularity, on-package matching networks, 5G scalable receiver (Rx) architecture, among others.

PHASE CORRECTING DEVICE, DISTANCE MEASURING DEVICE, PHASE FLUCTUATION DETECTING DEVICE AND PHASE CORRECTION METHOD
20220263513 · 2022-08-18 ·

A phase correcting device includes a local oscillator configured to give a local oscillation signal to a device configured to detect a phase of an inputted signal, a first phase detector configured to detect a phase of the local oscillation signal to output the phase of the local oscillation signal, a reference phase device configured to generate a quasi-reference phase corresponding to a reference phase of the local oscillation signal at a time of an initial setting of the local oscillator to output the quasi-reference phase, based on a reference clock, a second phase detector configured to detect, a fluctuation amount of a phase of the local oscillator, based on the phase detected by the first phase detector and the quasi-reference phase, and a correction circuit configured to correct the phase of the inputted signal by using a detection result of the second phase detector.

Ovenized crystal oscillator reference frequency signal generator

A reference frequency signal generator comprises a plurality of ovenized reference crystal oscillators (OCXOs) having different turn-over-temperatures, a selector logic circuit coupled to outputs of the OCXOs, a temperature sensor, and a controller coupled to an output of the temperature sensor. The selector logic circuit outputs one of the outputs of the OCXOs based on a control signal from the controller. The controller also generates control signals for the OCXOs. In some implementations, the reference frequency signal generator includes a phase-locked loop or a fractional output divider coupled to the output of the selector logic circuit and configured to receive a calibration signal from the controller.

FEEDBACK-PAUSE-CONTROLLED RADIOFREQUENCY CARRIER TRACKING FOR AMPLITUDE-MODULATED SIGNALS WITH AN UNSTABLE REFERENCE CLOCK
20220182103 · 2022-06-09 ·

Techniques are described for accurate tracking of a radiofrequency (RF) carrier for amplitude-modulated signals in unstable reference clock environments. For example, some embodiments operate in context of clock circuits in devices configured for near-field communication (NFC) card emulation (CE) mode. The clock circuits seek to generate an internal clocking signal by tracking a clock reference, such as an RF carrier. In some cases, the clock reference can unpredictably become unreliable for periods of time, during which continued tracking of the unreliable clock reference and/or improper reacquisition can yield appreciable frequency and phase errors in the generated internal clocking signal. Some embodiments implement phase delta detection with time limiting to limit the magnitude of such errors in the internal clocking signal introduced while tracking an unreliable clock reference. Other embodiments provide feedback-pause-control (FPC) to force proper clock reference reacquisition. Such FPC can be implemented additionally with time-limited phase detection.

Variable-length clock stretcher with combiner timing logic

A clock stretcher includes a delay line, a control unit, and a combiner. The delay line outputs a series of delayed phases of an input clock. The control circuit is clocked by the input clock. It outputs a series of delayed phase enable signals. The combiner circuit receives the delayed phases from the delay line and the delayed phase enable signals from the control circuit, and outputs a modified clock. The control circuit determines if stretching has started, if wraparound must occur, and if a next phase must be enabled. The combiner retimes a delayed phase enable signal for a first delayed phase using a flipflop clocked by a second delayed phase to generate a retimed phase enable signal. The combiner uses the retimed phase enable signal to pass a pulse of the first delayed phase to the output as a pulse of the modified clock.

PHASE LOCK LOOP REFERENCE LOSS DETECTION
20220103181 · 2022-03-31 ·

In described examples, a first clock generator generates an output clock signal in response to an input reference signal and in response to a feedback signal that is generated in response to the output clock signal. A code generator generates a code in response to the input reference signal. A loss detector generates an indication of a loss of the input reference signal in response to the feedback signal and at least two codes generated by the code generator.

Time-to-digital conversion circuit and method of the same

The application discloses a time-to-digital conversion circuit (100) including a first oscillator (110), a second oscillator (120), a first counting circuit (130), a second counting circuit (140), a first conversion circuit (150) and a processing circuit (160). The first oscillator is activated by a first signal and includes oscillating units having a first delay amount, wherein the first counting circuit is configured to count a number of times that the first tail end output signal of the first oscillator changes and store the same as a first counting result; the second counting circuit counts a number of oscillating units with an output change, other than the first tail end oscillating unit and stores the same as a second counting result; the first conversion circuit generates a first conversion signal according to the first counting result and the second counting result; the processing circuit generates the output signal at least according to the first conversion signal.

Phase correcting device, distance measuring device, phase fluctuation detecting device and phase correction method

A phase correcting device includes a local oscillator configured to give a local oscillation signal to a device configured to detect a phase of an inputted signal, a first phase detector configured to detect a phase of the local oscillation signal to output the phase of the local oscillation signal, a reference phase device configured to generate a quasi-reference phase corresponding to a reference phase of the local oscillation signal at a time of an initial setting of the local oscillator to output the quasi-reference phase, based on a reference clock, a second phase detector configured to detect a fluctuation amount of a phase of the local oscillator, based on the phase detected by the first phase detector and the quasi-reference phase, and a correction circuit configured to correct the phase of the inputted signal by using a detection result of the second phase detector.